High-Conflict Custody, Parental Alienation & Rebuilding After Divorce: A Conversation with Steve Mayeda - Ep 63
21 February 2026

High-Conflict Custody, Parental Alienation & Rebuilding After Divorce: A Conversation with Steve Mayeda - Ep 63

Cases & Cocktails

About

In Episode 63 of Cases & Cocktails, Bryan and Janice Eggleston sit down with Steve Mayeda, a coach who has spent more than two decades helping men navigate trauma, addiction recovery, false allegations, high-conflict custody battles, and parental alienation. 

Over a classic Ranch Water—tequila, fresh lime, and Topo Chico—the conversation goes beyond divorce litigation strategy and focuses on what many parents in Texas family law cases experience but rarely discuss: the emotional cost of fighting for your children.

Redefining Strength in High-Conflict Divorce

Steve Mayeda challenges the stereotype of what strength looks like in divorce. In his experience, true strength isn’t dominance—it’s resilience. It’s the father who survives false allegations, emergency protective orders, or years of limited possession and still chooses to remain steady, consistent, and child-focused.

“Stayed alive. Learned how to change your life so that you could be a parent,” Steve explains. That, he says, is the real win.

Bryan agrees, noting that in many high-conflict custody cases, success isn’t measured only by court orders. Sometimes the greatest victory is rebuilding a damaged parent-child relationship.

Parental Alienation & the Courtroom Reality

The episode tackles the difficult topic of parental alienation and how it intersects with litigation. While the emotional experience may feel overwhelming, Bryan explains that Texas courts focus on evidence, documentation, and conduct—not labels.

Terms like “narcissistic abuse” or “alienation” may describe a lived experience, but courts require proof tied to the child’s best interest. That’s why preparation, documentation, and strategic legal guidance matter in contested custody disputes.

At the same time, Steve emphasizes that legal strategy alone is not enough. Parents must address the emotional side of divorce—grief, betrayal, identity loss—through therapy, coaching, or support systems. Ignoring that work often spills over into the courtroom in ways that hurt credibility.

The Three Layers of Loss in Divorce

The discussion identifies three separate grief processes common in divorce:

    The loss of the relationshipThe loss of the future you envisionedThe loss of daily time with your children

Trying to navigate these while facing depositions, mediation, or trial can feel overwhelming. The solution, both agree, is incremental progress—becoming slightly stronger and more disciplined each day.

Rebuilding After Alienation

Reunification after alienation or prolonged separation is rarely immediate. It requires patience, consistency, and emotional regulation. Parents must rebuild trust while co-parenting—sometimes with the very person who contributed to the conflict.

Steve Mayeda describes this as the true “high road.” Not perfection. Not retaliation. But steady presence and long-term commitment to your child’s well-being.

The Takeaway for Texas Parents

Episode 63 offers a powerful reminder: high-conflict divorce and custody litigation are marathons, not sprints. Winning in Texas family court requires both legal preparation and personal growth.

As Bryan reflects, “Sometimes the real win isn’t the order you get. It’s who you become in the process.”